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View Full Version : Starbucks coffees are so goooood!



Maia Gabrial
7th February 2015, 15:30
I know Starbucks is very popular among the coffee drinkers of America. How many know what's in this coffee and tea? I was surprised that this information is coming out. Glad I don't drink the stuff...

All I can say is if ppl know what's in their drinks and still decide it's okay for them, then that's their choice. The risks are theirs.

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Geez, just one more thing to add to the long list of unsatisfactory foods and drinks.... at least for me anyway.

Koyaanisqatsi
7th February 2015, 16:29
Hahaha Starbucks is a faaar more ethical corp. than almost any other at their level of commerce. Make a video like this for Red Lobster, Mcdonalds, Dunkin Donuts or dennys and they'd be longer than feature length films. Starbucks buys from farms based of their internal "cafe" system (coffee and farmers equity) which is far more stringent than ridiculous fair trade standards. They require paperwork from all farmers showing how much farmers are paid, hours worked, ages, etc. They then buy preferentially from those companies. Do a little more digging and you'll see they have more good qualities (not all good, that wouldn't be realistic for a corporation) than most mega corporations. Maxwell house and foldiers are the villians of the industry. Also, sbux pasyries for many years now have been free from high fructose CS, artificial dyes and hydrogenated oils. Just a lil extra information, i worked there for many years @ one point

Nick Matkin
7th February 2015, 16:51
If you think that is bad, just look at what this chap says is in Starbuck's coffee! Shown in the Manning Report "The news behind the headlines".

I'll save you seven minutes of this video. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVjStWtQPYM)The bloke claims Starbuck's coffee contains the 'body fluids' of sodomites! :doh:

Absolutely no evidence of course.

And these people are walking amongst us...

Gaia
7th February 2015, 16:54
For health reasons, I frequently make coffee équitable at home with my trusty french press with a stainless steel stovetop expresso maker, because I don't know who to trust or what to believe now about those big food corporations.

Snowflower
7th February 2015, 17:19
I never drink the stuff, but my children do. However, this video doesn't do a decent job of demonstrating malfeasance. It looks like a conspiracy nut's efforts to make something look bad with a small amount of actual evidence. So, I can't share it with my kids.

Maia Gabrial
7th February 2015, 17:19
There are people investigating all the time. That's why videos like this come out all the time. Good. The Truth is coming out about many things. I'd like to see more of them to make us all aware of what's being done in the name of profit and depopulation.

Give it time, Koyaanisqatsi. It's not over yet....

Gaia
7th February 2015, 17:25
Is there any truth to persistent rumours about Tim Hortons adding nicotine to its coffee?

Olam
7th February 2015, 17:41
Is there any truth to persistent rumours about Tim Hortons adding nicotine to its coffee?

I can't say that is true but I can tell you that anytime and every time I have had one of their coffees my heart rate and blood pressure blows thru the roof .
I drink coffee every day and it never does this with any other brand. My body reacts like its very nasty stuff.
I think its probably that the caffeine levels are maxed out if that is possible.

Gaia
7th February 2015, 17:54
Is there any truth to persistent rumours about Tim Hortons adding nicotine to its coffee?

I can't say that is true but I can tell you that anytime and every time I have had one of their coffees my heart rate and blood pressure blows thru the roof .
I drink coffee every day and it never does this with any other brand. My body reacts like its very nasty stuff.
I think its probably that the caffeine levels are maxed out if that is possible.

Coffee and tea are both listed on the food list my nutritionist gave me, but she didn't comment on it one way or the other. I'm only allowed minimal caffeine anyway because of my clotting disorder, which basically equals the amount in 8 ounces of soda maximum per day. So Tim Hortons is out of my life.... For good!! It makes me sick everytime I take a sip from it, but it's not the case with my homemade coffee :cool:

Tyy1907
7th February 2015, 18:32
Is there any truth to persistent rumours about Tim Hortons adding nicotine to its coffee?

There is SOMETHING addictive in their coffee. I can attest to that. I don't crave homebrew quite the same way. Would be interesting to see lab results - real ones- as to whats really in the stuff.

Violet
7th February 2015, 19:02
I knew I should have bought that fair-trade Ethiopian coffee that they got new in the supermarket.

Mike
7th February 2015, 19:11
If you think that is bad, just look at what this chap says is in Starbuck's coffee! Shown in the Manning Report "The news behind the headlines".

I'll save you seven minutes of this video. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVjStWtQPYM)The bloke claims Starbuck's coffee contains the 'body fluids' of sodomites! :doh:

Absolutely no evidence of course.

And these people are walking amongst us...



then its the best sodomite fluid in the universe;) I used to drink the sh!t out of this stuff. all day long. then, when I got home id get into the beer. no wonder id wake up with my heart pounding like crazy! I could never decide if it was the coffee or the cheap beer or the combination of the 2. back then, I was so preposterously arrogant that I never regarded these episodes as anything more than a nuisance. what a fool I was.

my heart is so messed up these days, that if I even smelled coffee id likely drop dead of heart failure. and yet, when I watch someone drink a tall black starbucks coffee im consumed with the type of envy a legless man must have when he watches the boston marathon. I always suspected life wouldn't be worth living in the absence of strong, black coffee...and I still haven't decided if it is;)

Whiskey_Mystic
7th February 2015, 19:32
I love the spooky doom music in the video.

avid
7th February 2015, 20:39
Starbucks - to be avoided, part of the oppressive Zionist régime - sorry! On my blacklist.

grannyfranny100
7th February 2015, 21:17
Mike, I absolutely adore your quote - find what you love and let it kill you.

I like the hit of cigarettes and am allergic to coffee. I have often had fantasies of hospitals having the same policies about cigarette and coffee consumption. You get the idea- no coffee in the hospital or even outside in your car.

Can you imagine the holier than thou, political correct staff without their preference for a coffee hit? Not a pretty sight.

Perhaps they would be willing to offer smokers a hit room in exchange for allowing them the freedom to consume coffee.

Now don't bore me with your stats on the health danger of cigarettes. You have already bought into the mind control.

DeDukshyn
7th February 2015, 23:42
Is there any truth to persistent rumours about Tim Hortons adding nicotine to its coffee?

There is SOMETHING addictive in their coffee. I can attest to that. I don't crave homebrew quite the same way. Would be interesting to see lab results - real ones- as to whats really in the stuff.

I third that ... and I have heard the nicotine rumour for many years. Here's what I have heard -- it might be complete BS, but it is what I have heard -- it sounds plausible to me:

Tim's owns all its own coffee processing facilities. Nicotine and MSG are used as "processing agents" -- in the same way Ammonium Chloride is a "processing agent" for foods and does not need to be listed as an ingredient. "Processing agents" have allowable limits that can stay in the food, without them having to be listed as an ingredient. I can taste and smell ammonium chloride in most grocery store produce and processed meats (I'm a bit sensitive to it)so I know a fair bit gets left. And yes, most all your processed meats and produce from any big agra co, has washed their food in poison first, before they sell it to you. It allows them to use far less care in delivering fresh foods while limiting lawsuits from harmful bacteria.

A bit of a tangent there, but this is what I have heard about Tim's coffee ... I was addicted to it for a while as well -- I stay clear of it now. If Tim's is doing this, I imagine Starbuck's as well.

Maunagarjana
8th February 2015, 00:39
https://i.imgur.com/VDBUOEc.jpg

Carmody
8th February 2015, 01:01
Is there any truth to persistent rumours about Tim Hortons adding nicotine to its coffee?

There is SOMETHING addictive in their coffee. I can attest to that. I don't crave homebrew quite the same way. Would be interesting to see lab results - real ones- as to whats really in the stuff.

bisphenol leakage, from the cup coatings, is one aspect.. The other is a level of suspected to be....added caffeine.

Yetti
8th February 2015, 01:19
Well... I'm a coffeholic And I think the starbuck coffe is Nor That good anyway, the roast they use is too dark killing the good flavor of the coffe, You guys should try an expresso in Italy , Austria, or Argentina, is way better . Why : the seed are roasted to the maximum point of roast Before loosing the flavonoids that produce the characteristic smell of an expresso. Starbuk Burns the coffe. What a shame what a waiste of good seeds.... Also I do not like the logo either !!

Mike
8th February 2015, 06:57
Mike, I absolutely adore your quote - find what you love and let it kill you.

I like the hit of cigarettes and am allergic to coffee. I have often had fantasies of hospitals having the same policies about cigarette and coffee consumption. You get the idea- no coffee in the hospital or even outside in your car.

Can you imagine the holier than thou, political correct staff without their preference for a coffee hit? Not a pretty sight.

Perhaps they would be willing to offer smokers a hit room in exchange for allowing them the freedom to consume coffee.

Now don't bore me with your stats on the health danger of cigarettes. You have already bought into the mind control.


thanks GrannyFranny. funny, i didnt really notice Bukowski was drinking and smoking there until today:p. i suspected this quote had to do with his vices, but i also thought there was some deeper meaning i was somehow missing. i just liked the juxtaposition.

you make a wonderful point! ive worked in hospitals, actually. ive been chuckling here for a few minutes, imagining a group of huddled up nurses outside the hospital, sipping their coffees on a 5 degree day, quietly complaining about the new policy;)

Natalia
8th February 2015, 08:43
then its the best sodomite fluid in the universe;) I used to drink the sh!t out of this stuff. all day long. then, when I got home id get into the beer. no wonder id wake up with my heart pounding like crazy! I could never decide if it was the coffee or the cheap beer or the combination of the 2. back then, I was so preposterously arrogant that I never regarded these episodes as anything more than a nuisance. what a fool I was.

my heart is so messed up these days, that if I even smelled coffee id likely drop dead of heart failure. and yet, when I watch someone drink a tall black starbucks coffee im consumed with the type of envy a legless man must have when he watches the boston marathon. I always suspected life wouldn't be worth living in the absence of strong, black coffee...and I still haven't decided if it is;)

lol, you so funny :)

I'm going to have to give up coffee, too...but I loves it :(...especially to go to a coffee shop with friends and family and having a juice there isn't quite the same...and wheat grass shot at work that I made up in the morning in aloe vera juice, just isn't quite the same...

I have tried to give up coffee totally some times...and did it for a while but then got back to drinking it but not as much as I used to...

grannyfranny100
8th February 2015, 12:49
Mike, you said, "thanks GrannyFranny. funny, i didnt really notice Bukowski was drinking and smoking there until today. i suspected this quote had to do with his vices, but i also thought there was some deeper meaning i was somehow missing. i just liked the juxtaposition. you make a wonderful point! ive worked in hospitals, actually. ive been chuckling here for a few minutes, imagining a group of huddled up nurses outside the hospital, sipping their coffees on a 5 degree day, quietly complaining about the new policy."

That's a good one. The politically correct hospitals in my area won't even allow smokers to take smoke breaks in their cars in the parking lot or anywhere on the property! Starbucks needs to be located across the street if coffee was banned as is smoking.

My fantasies go further than that. As the coffee withdraw hits, nurses' hands would be too shaky to draw bloods while turning hard-stick patients into pin cushions and administering patient meds would tax their concentration.

Imagine gurney-slamming guys cornering onto another hallway or negotiating an elevator without bruising the patient.

Neurosurgeons (without coffee-sharpened focus) would slice and dice patients like salad-making kitchen staff, And speaking of cafeteria staff, I suspect they would be devising new high-caffeine cuisine while administrative staff would slam back Mountain Dew, candy bars and sugar packets.

BTW. My comment ending my original post (not wanting to hear health stats) is a plea for compassion toward stressed out smokers. Hospitals are always developing public relations campaigns to increase their market share: better food, stats on quality categories and a politically correct policy on smoking no matter the emotional toll on patients. Long live Starbucks and Bukowski.

lucidity
8th February 2015, 14:20
Is there any truth to persistent rumours about Tim Hortons adding nicotine to its coffee?

I can't say that is true but I can tell you that anytime and every time I have had one of their coffees my heart rate and blood pressure blows thru the roof .
I drink coffee every day and it never does this with any other brand. My body reacts like its very nasty stuff.
I think its probably that the caffeine levels are maxed out if that is possible.

If you believe that there's something definitely 'different' or 'strange' about this brand of coffee
you should inform either:
1. NaturalNews.com. They have their own high tech lab analysis facilities.
If you can tell them you suspect there's nicotine in there, they can test for it and confirm or
reject this hypothesis. They wont charge you for this.
2. ConsumereLab.com. They specialise in performing analyses on supplements and foods.
If you tell them about your suspicions... perhaps they'll test it for you (again, i presume for free).

be happy

lucidity :-)